General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: As it is the plan is to cut social security benefits by 25% when the trust funds are spent. [View all]muriel_volestrangler
(105,475 posts)which isn't the same as dividing it by 75 to get the amount for each year. The 2013 figure (the Republican report was from the 2011 Trustees' Report) is $9.6 trillion, here: http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/tr/2013/IV_B_LRest.html#267528
They also express it in terms of the percentage of expected taxable payroll each year (2.6%) or GDP (0.9%). With the current GDP being $16.6 trillion, that's about $150 billion per year, in current money.
(I presume 'taxable payroll' means with the cap currently in force; I think, though I can't remember where now, one of the other documents I linked to said the cap limits the taxable payroll to about 82% of the total payroll - so if the cap were removed, but no-one's benefits were increased at the same time, you'd expect to get 18/82 = about 22% more money coming in - which would be roughly another 2.7% of total payroll, or about what would be needed to fund SS for 75 years. But I may have got that bit wrong).